Title: Multi-tower Synthesis Scaling of Regional Carbon Dioxide Flux
1Multi-tower Synthesis Scaling of Regional Carbon
Dioxide Flux
- Another fine mess of observed data, remote
sensing and ecosystem model parameterization
Ankur Desai Penn State University Meteorology
Dept. ChEAS Meeting VII June 2005
2Goals
- Identify key processes of within-site and
cross-site variability of carbon dioxide flux in
space and time with stand-scale observations - Develop simple multiple flux tower synthesis
aggregation methods to test the hypotheses that
stand-scale towers can sufficiently sample
landscape for upscaling to regional flux - Parameterize and optimize ecosystem models of
varying complexity to the region using biometric
inventory, remote sensing and component flux data
and test effect of input parameter resolution and
type on model performance - Constrain top-down regional CO2 flux using
multi-tower concentration measurements, and
simple Eulerian and Lagrangian/stochastic
transport schema
3ChEAS region and sites
- 13 stand-scale flux towers, 1 tall tower, new
roving towers
Legend MODIS IGBP 1km landcover
4Interannual variability of NEE
- Interannual variability of NEE is coherent at
many but not all sites. This does not hold as
well for GEP or ER
5Intercomparisons and Upscaling
6Flux tower spatial variability
- Stand age is a strong driver of variability
within specific cover types
7CO2 flux variation drivers
- Canopy height serves as a good proxy for stand
age - Canopy height is well correlated to NEE and GEP,
but not to ER, as one might expect - The relationship holds for multiple vegetation
types, especially for GEP - Thus, remotely sensed measurements of forest
height, e.g., canopy lidar, could be beneficial
to regional scaling
8Multi-tower aggregation method
- While mature hardwood sites are dominant in the
40-km radius around WLEF region according to FIA
and 30-m Wiscland data, wetlands and young and
intermediate aspen sites cannot be ignored
- Simple method used to aggregate flux tower data
using land cover and FIA data and tower derived
parameters
9Multi-tower aggregation results
- Multi-tower synthesis aggregation and footprint
weighted decomposition results for 40-km radius
are in very close agreement - Tall tower has greater ER and smaller NEE
compared to bottom-up methods
10Multi-tower aggregation results
11Regional flux comparisons
- Convergence in regional estimates of CO2 flux
- These estimates are larger than tall tower flux
- Reasons remain elusive
12Ecosystem modeling
- Competing effects of ecosystem model complexity
and data assimilation / parameterization in the
upper Midwest - Examine two models
- BIOME-BGC stand-scale single-layer BGC model
- ED gap-scale model with explicit
disturbance/mortality/size - Assimilate ChEAS area ecosystem information
- Remotely sensed land cover, phenology
- FIA stand age distribution, harvest rates, land
use - Component flux optimized PFT rates and
decomposition rates - Compare model to tall tower and other regional
estimates - Compare to multi-tower aggregation, footprint
decomposition, ABL budget based methods - Assess impact of model complexity
- Assess role of data optimization, scale, density
- Predict future changes in regional CO2 flux
13Biome-BGC
- Daily time step relatively simple
biome/stand-scale ecosystem process model - Stand age and disturbance can be externally
prescribed - Initial work here will be used with more
elaborate scaling for currently ongoing roving
tower/scaling project by F.A. Heinsch, U. Montana
14Ecosystem Demography model
- Moorcroft, P. R, G. C. Hurtt, S. W. Pacala, A
method for scaling vegetation dynamics the
ecosystem demography model (ED), Ecological
Monographs, 71, 557-585, 2001. - Explicit consideration of stochastic disturbance
events, effect of stand age and mortality
15Remote-sensing
- IKONOS 4-m 10x10 km around tall tower
(courtesy B. Cook) - Legend
16Spatial resolution and land cover
- Land cover in region is highly sensitive to
resolution due to large number of small area
cover types, especially wetlands - Land cover change is also important due to
logging and disturbance
17Incorporation of FIA data
- FIA statistics on age, biomass, mortality and CWD
can be used to prescribe model parameters
18Multi-tower ABL budget
- Simple Eulerian models with 1-D ABL depth model
and NOAA aircraft CO2 profile data can be used to
test ring of tower validity and provide
confidence for inversion
- More sophisticated stochastic Lagrangian model,
similar to COBRA, to be developed to test methods
to assimilate multi-tower synthesis data
19Conclusions
- Coherent variations in time for NEE across most
sites but not as much for ER and GEP - Stand age, canopy height, cover type can explain
large proportion of cross-site variation - Convergence is seen in bottom-up and top-down
regional flux estimates but they generally
differ from tall-tower flux, except when
reweighted for footprint contribution - Ecosystem models to be run this summer
- Resolution of remotely sensed data can have large
impact on scaling results in heterogeneous region
- Simple budget methods with ring of towers
suggests that more complex inversions will work - Multi-tower work here complements single-tower
footprint and budget work of W. Wang and
tall-tower modeling of D. Ricciuto
20Some publications
- Cook, B.D., Davis, K.J., Wang, W., Desai, A.R.,
Berger, B.W., Teclaw, R.M., Martin, J.M.,
Bolstad, P., Bakwin, P., Yi, C. and Heilman, W.,
2004. Carbon exchange and venting anomalies in an
upland deciduous forest in northern Wisconsin,
USA. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology,
126(3-4) 271-295 (doi10.1016/j.agrformet.2004.06
.008). - Desai, A.R., Bolstad, P., Cook, B.D., Davis, K.J.
and Carey, E.V., 2005. Comparing net ecosystem
exchange of carbon dioxide between an old-growth
and mature forest in the upper Midwest, USA.
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 128(1-2)
33-55 (doi 10.1016/j.agrformet.2004.09.005). - Desai, A.R., Noormets, A., Bolstad, P.V., Chen,
J., Cook, B.D., Davis, K.J., Euskirchen, E.S.,
Gough, C.M., Martin, J.M., Ricciuto, D.M.,
Schmid, H.P., Tang, J. and Wang, W., submitted.
Influence of vegetation and climate on carbon
dioxide fluxes across the Upper Midwest, USA
Implications for regional scaling, Agricultural
and Forest Meteorology. - Heinsch, F.A., Zhao, M., Running, S.W., Kimball,
J.S., Nemani, R.R., Davis, K.J., Bolstad, P.V.,
Cook, B.D., Desai, A.R., et al., in press.
Evaluation of remote sensing based terrestrial
producitivity from MODIS using regional tower
eddy flux network observations, IEEE Transactions
on Geosciences and Remote Sensing.
21Ph.D. plans
- May ChEAS meeting, fieldwork
- Jun-Aug Ecosystem model parameterization and
runs, potential return visits to Montana/Harvard
for model work - July-Aug Top-down Lagrangian ABL budget
- Jun-Oct ChEAS special issue paper reviews
- Sep pre-dissertation defense committee meeting
- Sep-Dec dissertation writing, redo footprint
model, add 2004 tower data to 1st chapter,
finalize multi-tower aggregation chapter, apply
to jobs - Sep present at International CO2 conference,
Boulder, CO - Oct ChEAS fall fieldwork
- Oct-Nov present at Ameriflux, Boulder, CO
- Dec present at AGU, San Francisco, CA
- Dec-Feb finish dissertation, send to committee
and to format review - Jan present ABL research at AMS, Atlanta, GA?
- Mar defend dissertation!
- Mar-Sep submit final model results for
publication, party, travel - Fall 2006 post-doc?
22Thank You
ChEAS
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